In this section, you will learn to store information in variables. You will learn about two types of data: strings, which are sets of characters, and numerical data types.
A variable holds a value.
message = "Hello Python world!"
print(message)
Hello Python world!
A variable holds a value. You can change the value of a variable at any point.
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message = "Hello Python world!"
print(message)
message = "Python is my favorite language!"
print(message)
Hello Python world! Python is my favorite language!
There is one common error when using variables, that you will almost certainly encounter at some point. Take a look at this code, and see if you can figure out why it causes an error.
message = "Thank you for sharing Python with the world, Guido!"
print(mesage)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- NameError Traceback (most recent call last) /home/ehmatthes/development_resources/project_notes/intro_programming/notebooks/<ipython-input-12-7966723379c3> in <module>() 1 message = "Thank you for sharing Python with the world, Guido!" ----> 2 print(mesage) NameError: name 'mesage' is not defined
Let's look through this error message. First, we see it is a NameError. Then we see the file that caused the error, and a green arrow shows us what line in that file caused the error. Then we get some more specific feedback, that "name 'mesage' is not defined".
You may have already spotted the source of the error. We spelled message two different ways. Python does not care whether we use the variable name "message" or "mesage". Python only cares that the spellings of our variable names match every time we use them.
This is pretty important, because it allows us to have a variable "name" with a single name in it, and then another variable "names" with a bunch of names in it.
We can fix NameErrors by making sure all of our variable names are spelled consistently.
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message = "Thank you for sharing Python with the world, Guido!"
print(message)
Thank you for sharing Python with the world, Guido!
In case you didn't know Guido van Rossum created the Python language over 20 years ago, and he is considered Python's Benevolent Dictator for Life. Guido still signs off on all major changes to the core Python language.
Strings are sets of characters. Strings are easier to understand by looking at some examples.
Strings are contained by either single or double quotes.
my_string = "This is a double-quoted string."
my_string = 'This is a single-quoted string.'
This lets us make strings that contain quotations.
quote = "Linus Torvalds once said, 'Any program is only as good as it is useful.'"
You can easily change the case of a string, to present it the way you want it to look.
first_name = 'eric'
print(first_name)
print(first_name.title())
eric Eric
It is often good to store data in lower case, and then change the case as you want to for presentation. This catches some TYpos. It also makes sure that 'eric', 'Eric', and 'ERIC' are not considered three different people.
Some of the most common cases are lower, title, and upper.
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first_name = 'eric'
print(first_name)
print(first_name.title())
print(first_name.upper())
first_name = 'Eric'
print(first_name.lower())
eric Eric ERIC eric
You will see this syntax quite often, where a variable name is followed by a dot and then the name of an action, followed by a set of parentheses. The parentheses may be empty, or they may contain some values.
variable_name.action()
In this example, the word "action" is the name of a method. A method is something that can be done to a variable. The methods 'lower', 'title', and 'upper' are all functions that have been written into the Python language, which do something to strings. Later on, you will learn to write your own methods.
It is often very useful to be able to combine strings into a message or page element that we want to display. Again, this is easier to understand through an example.
first_name = 'ada'
last_name = 'lovelace'
full_name = first_name + ' ' + last_name
print(full_name.title())
Ada Lovelace
The plus sign combines two strings into one, which is called "concatenation". You can use as many plus signs as you want in composing messages. In fact, many web pages are written as giant strings which are put together through a long series of string concatenations.
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first_name = 'ada'
last_name = 'lovelace'
full_name = first_name + ' ' + last_name
message = full_name.title() + ' ' + "was considered the world's first computer programmer."
print(message)
Ada Lovelace was considered the world's first computer programmer.
If you don't know who Ada Lovelace is, you might want to go read what Wikipedia or the Computer History Museum have to say about her. Her life and her work are also the inspiration for the Ada Initiative, which supports women who are involved in technical fields.
The term "whitespace" refers to characters that the computer is aware of, but are invisible to readers. The most common whitespace characters are spaces, tabs, and newlines.
Spaces are easy to create, because you have been using them as long as you have been using computers. Tabs and newlines are represented by special character combinations.
The two-character combination "\t" makes a tab appear in a string. Tabs can be used anywhere you like in a string.
print("Hello everyone!")
Hello everyone!
print("\tHello everyone!")
Hello everyone!
print("Hello \teveryone!")
Hello everyone!
The combination "\n" makes a newline appear in a string. You can use newlines anywhere you like in a string.
print("Hello everyone!")
Hello everyone!
print("\nHello everyone!")
Hello everyone!
print("Hello \neveryone!")
Hello everyone!
print("\n\n\nHello everyone!")
Hello everyone!
Many times you will allow users to enter text into a box, and then you will read that text and use it. It is really easy for people to include extra whitespace at the beginning or end of their text. Whitespace includes spaces, tabs, and newlines.
It is often a good idea to strip this whitespace from strings before you start working with them. For example, you might want to let people log in, and you probably want to treat 'eric ' as 'eric' when you are trying to see if I exist on your system.
You can strip whitespace from the left side, the right side, or both sides of a string.
name = ' eric '
print(name.lstrip())
print(name.rstrip())
print(name.strip())
eric eric eric
It's hard to see exactly what is happening, so maybe the following will make it a little more clear:
name = ' eric '
print('-' + name.lstrip() + '-')
print('-' + name.rstrip() + '-')
print('-' + name.strip() + '-')
-eric - - eric- -eric-
Dealing with simple numerical data is fairly straightforward in Python, but there are a few things you should know about.
You can do all of the basic operations with integers, and everything should behave as you expect. Addition and subtraction use the standard plus and minus symbols. Multiplication uses the asterisk, and division uses a forward slash. Exponents use two asterisks.
print(3+2)
5
print(3-2)
1
print(3*2)
6
print(3/2)
1.5
print(3**2)
9
You can use parenthesis to modify the standard order of operations.
standard_order = 2+3*4
print(standard_order)
14
my_order = (2+3)*4
print(my_order)
20
Floating-point numbers refer to any number with a decimal point. Most of the time, you can think of floating point numbers as decimals, and they will behave as you expect them to.
print(0.1+0.1)
0.2
However, sometimes you will get an answer with an unexpectly long decimal part:
print(0.1+0.2)
0.30000000000000004
This happens because of the way computers represent numbers internally; this has nothing to do with Python itself. Basically, we are used to working in powers of ten, where one tenth plus two tenths is just three tenths. But computers work in powers of two. So your computer has to represent 0.1 in a power of two, and then 0.2 as a power of two, and express their sum as a power of two. There is no exact representation for 0.3 in powers of two, and we see that in the answer to 0.1+0.2.
Python tries to hide this kind of stuff when possible. Don't worry about it much for now; just don't be surprised by it, and know that we will learn to clean up our results a little later on.
You can also get the same kind of result with other operations.
print(3*0.1)
0.30000000000000004
There are a couple differences in the way Python 2 and Python 3 handle numbers. In Python 2, dividing two integers always results in an integer, while Python 3 always returns a float. This is fine when the result of your integer division is an integer, but it leads to quite different results when the answer is a decimal.
# Python 2.7
print 4/2
2
# Python 2.7
print 3/2
1
# Python 3.3
print(4/2)
2.0
# Python 3.3
print(3/2)
1.5
If you are getting numerical results that you don't expect, or that don't make sense, check if the version of Python you are using is treating integers differently than you expect.
Find a way to make your computer interpret 3/2 once in Python 2, and once in Python 3.
(HINT) Don't spend too much time on this, unless you like reading on forums about installing from packages and what not.
If you just want to play around with Python 2 and Python 3, you can easily do so on pythontutor.com. Click "Start using Online Python Tutor now", and then delete the sample code in the text box so you can enter your own code. On that page, there is a drop-down list just below the text box that lets you select different versions of Python. Click "Visualize Execution" to run your code. On the next page, you can either click "Forward" to step through your code one line at a time, or click "Last" to run your entire program.
As you begin to write more complicated code, you will have to spend more time thinking about how to code solutions to the problems you want to solve. Once you come up with an idea, you will spend a fair amount of time troubleshooting your code, and revising your overall approach.
Comments allow you to write in English, within your program. In Python, any line that starts with a pound (#) symbol is ignored by the Python interpreter.
# This line is a comment.
print("This line is not a comment, it is code.")
This line is not a comment, it is code.
Writing good comments is one of the clear signs of a good programmer. If you have any real interest in taking programming seriously, start using comments now. You will see them throughout the examples in these notebooks.
The Python community is incredibly large and diverse. People are using Python in science, in medicine, in robotics, on the internet, and in any other field you can imagine. This diverse group of thinkers has developed a collective mindset about how programs should be written. If you want to understand Python and the community of Python programmers, it is a good idea to learn the ways Python programmers think.
You can easily see a set of guiding principles that is written right into the language:
import this
The Zen of Python, by Tim Peters Beautiful is better than ugly. Explicit is better than implicit. Simple is better than complex. Complex is better than complicated. Flat is better than nested. Sparse is better than dense. Readability counts. Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules. Although practicality beats purity. Errors should never pass silently. Unless explicitly silenced. In the face of ambiguity, refuse the temptation to guess. There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it. Although that way may not be obvious at first unless you're Dutch. Now is better than never. Although never is often better than *right* now. If the implementation is hard to explain, it's a bad idea. If the implementation is easy to explain, it may be a good idea. Namespaces are one honking great idea -- let's do more of those!
There is a lot here. Let's just take a few lines, and see what they mean for you as a new programmer.
Beautiful is better than ugly.
Python programmers recognize that good code can actually be beautiful. If you come up with a particularly elegant or efficient way to solve a problem, especially a difficult problem, other Python programmers will respect your work and may even call it beautiful. There is beauty in high-level technical work.
Explicit is better than implicit.
It is better to be clear about what you are doing, than come up with some shorter way to do something that is difficult to understand.
Simple is better than complex.
Complex is better than complicated.
Keep your code simple whenever possible, but recognize that we sometimes take on really difficult problems for which there are no easy solutions. In those cases, accept the complexity but avoid complication.
Readability counts.
There are very few interesting and useful programs these days that are written and maintained entirely by one person. Write your code in a way that others can read it as easily as possible, and in a way that you will be able to read and understand it 6 months from now. This includes writing good comments in your code.
There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.
There are many ways to solve most problems that come up in programming. However, most problems have a standard, well-established approach. Save complexity for when it is needed, and solve problems in the most straightforward way possible.
Now is better than never.
No one ever writes perfect code. If you have an idea you want to implement it, write some code that works. Release it, let it be used by others, and then steadily improve it.
We have learned quite a bit so far about programming, but we haven't learned enough yet for you to go create something. In the next notebook, things will get much more interesting, and there will be a longer list of overall challenges.
# I learned how to strip whitespace from strings.
name = '\t\teric'
print("I can strip tabs from my name: " + name.strip())
I can strip tabs from my name: eric
As I have said earlier, the Python community is incredibly rich and diverse. Here are a couple resources to look at, if you want to do some exploring.
The main Python website is probably not of too much interest to you at this point, but it is a great resource to know about as you start to learn more.
The Python Conference (PyCon) is an incredible event, and the community is entirely welcoming to new programmers. They happen all over the world, throughout the year. If you can make your way to one of these conferences, you will learn a great deal and meet some really interesting people.
Women and minorities are still under-represented in most technology fields, and the programming world is no different in this regard. That said, the Python community may well be the most welcoming and supportive programming community for women and minorities. There are a number of groups dedicated to bringing women and minorities together around programming in Python, and there are a number of explicit Codes of Conduct for Python-related events.
PyLadies is one of the most visible of these organizations. They are a great resource, so go see what they do and what they have to offer.
Wherever there are a number of Python programmers, they will find a way to get together. Python user groups are regular meetings of Python users from a local area. Go take a look at the list of user groups, and see if there is one near you.